Assessment of the Effects of Holding Time and Temperature on Escherichia coli Densities in Surface Water Samples

Author:

Pope Misty L.1,Bussen Michelle2,Feige Mary Ann3,Shadix Lois3,Gonder Sharon4,Rodgers Crystal4,Chambers Yildiz1,Pulz Jessica1,Miller Ken1,Connell Kevin1,Standridge Jon2

Affiliation:

1. DynCorp, Alexandria, Virginia 22304

2. Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, Madison, Wisconsin 53718

3. Environmental Protection Agency Technical Support Center, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268-1320

4. Environmental Protection Agency Headquarters, Washington, D.C. 20460

Abstract

ABSTRACT Escherichia coli is a routinely used microbiological indicator of water quality. To determine whether holding time and storage conditions had an effect on E. coli densities in surface water, studies were conducted in three phases, encompassing 24 sites across the United States and four commonly used monitoring methods. During all three phases of the study, E. coli samples were analyzed at time 0 and at 8, 24, 30, and 48 h after sample collection. During phase 1, when 4°C samples were evaluated by Colilert or by placing a membrane onto mFC medium followed by transfer to nutrient agar containing 4-methylumbelliferyl-β- d -glucuronide (mFC/NA-MUG), three of four sites showed no significant differences throughout the 48-h study. During phase 2, five of seven sites showed no significant difference between time 0 and 24 h by membrane filtration (mFC/NA-MUG). When evaluated by the Colilert method, five of seven sites showed no significant difference in E. coli density between time 0 and 48 h. During phase 3, 8 of 13 sites showed no significant differences in E. coli densities between time 0 and the 48-h holding time, regardless of method. Based on the results of these studies, it appears that if samples are held below 10°C and are not allowed to freeze, most surface water E. coli samples analyzed by commonly used methods beyond 8 h after sample collection can generate E. coli data comparable to those generated within 8 h of sample collection. Notwithstanding this conclusion, E. coli samples collected from surface waters should always be analyzed as soon as possible.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference11 articles.

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2. Eaton A. D. L. S. Clesceri and A. Greenberg (ed.). 1998. Standard methods for the examination of water and wastewater 20th ed. American Public Health Association American Water Works Association and Water Environment Federation Washington D.C.

3. Federal Register. 1995. National primary and secondary drinking water regulations: analytical methods for regulated drinking water contaminants, final rule, technical corrections. Fed. Regist.60:34084-34086.

4. McDaniels, A. E., and R. H. Bordner. 1983. Effect of holding time and temperature on coliform numbers in drinking water. J. Am. Water Works Assoc.75:458-463.

5. Holding effects on coliform enumeration in drinking water samples

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